Fascist moves by the Feds Catch All

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If true (as claimed by his attorney), sending 20 officers to re-arrest the DC Subway Hurler on federal felony assault charges after the local judge allowed his release on local DC felony assault charges seems to fit.

As an aside, I’ve got no objection to the guy being arrested, losing his job for conduct unbecoming of a DOJ attorney or being charged with misdemeanor assault (felony assault seems overbearing and apparently a Federal judge agreed with that, but even the act of overcharging in this case might be unethical (if they prosecuted the overcharge to trial, at least) but wouldn’t be fascist so long as he has due process to rebut/defend against the charges).
 
So…we’re moving all Trump threads into this one from now on?
 

In Washington Crackdown, Making a Federal Case Out of Low-Level Arrests​

A single afternoon in court illustrated the new ways in which laws are being enforced after President Trump’s takeover of the city’s police.


“… The stream of defendants who shuffled through a federal courtroom on Thursday afternoon illustrated the new ways in which laws are being enforced in the nation’s capital after the president’s takeover of the city’s police. They were appearing before a magistrate judge on charges that would typically be handled at the local court level, if they were filed at all.

One man had been arrested over an open container of alcohol. Another had been charged with threatening the president after delivering a drunken outburst following his arrest on vandalism. And one defendant’s gun case so alarmed prosecutors that they intend to drop the case.

… One of the recipients of Mr. Trump’s show of force was Mark Bigelow, 28, a part-time delivery driver for Amazon.

After midnight on Aug. 19, Mr. Bigelow was sitting in the middle row of a van parked on a street in Northeast Washington with its doors open, according to court papers. Two other men were in the front when a full complement of law enforcement officials — from the Metropolitan Police Department, the F.B.I., the Drug Enforcement Administration, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and the State Department’s Diplomatic Security Service — stopped and saw what appeared to be an open container of alcohol in the front seat.

As law enforcement questioned and searched the two other passengers, Mr. Bigelow left the van and started to walk away, until other agents stopped him, according to the charging document. Peering into the van, an officer spotted “a second cup containing an alcoholic beverage in the middle row seat,” at which point Mr. Bigelow was arrested on charges of possession of an open container, a misdemeanor.

As he was placed in a vehicle, the handcuffed Mr. Bigelow became belligerent, twisting his body and yelling, “Get off me! Y’all too little, bro!” at an ICE agent, according to a court filing, which described how Mr. Bigelow made “physical contact” by kicking an agent in the hand and another in the leg.

As a result, Mr. Bigelow was charged with assaulting, resisting or impeding a federal officer, an offense that carries a maximum sentence of eight years in prison.…”
 


“… As you all know, Chicago’s a killing field right now. And they don’t acknowledge it and they say ‘we don’t need’em, freedom, freedom, he’s a dictator, he’s a dictator.’ A lot of people are saying maybe we’d like a dictator. I don’t like a dictator, I’m not a dictator. I’m a man with great common sense and I’m a smart person.”
 
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